Users Guide
after receiving a message to pause a specified priority. PFC traffic is paused only after surpassing both
static and dynamic thresholds for the priority specified for the port.
• By default, PFC is enabled when you enable DCB. If you have not loaded FCoE_DCB_Config and
iSCSI_DCB_Config, DCB is disabled. When you enable DCB globally, you cannot simultaneously enable
link-level flow control.
• Buffer space is allocated and de-allocated only when you configure a PFC priority on the port.
Enhanced Transmission Selection
Enhanced transmission selection (ETS) supports optimized bandwidth allocation between traffic types in
multiprotocol (Ethernet, FCoE, SCSI) links.
ETS allows you to divide traffic according to its 802.1p priority into different priority groups (traffic classes)
and configure bandwidth allocation and queue scheduling for each group to ensure that each traffic type is
correctly prioritized and receives its required bandwidth. For example, you can prioritize low-latency storage
or server cluster traffic in a traffic class to receive more bandwidth and restrict best-effort LAN traffic assigned
to a different traffic class.
NOTE: Use the following command to enable etsacl: cam-acl l2acl 2 ipv4acl 2 ipv6acl 0
ipv4qos 0 l2qos 0 l2pt 0 ipmacacl 0 vman-qos 0 fcoeacl 2 etsacl 3. After executing this
command, you must save the configuration and then reload the system.
The following figure shows how ETS allows you to allocate bandwidth when different traffic types are classed
according to 802.1p priority and mapped to priority groups.
Figure 32. Enhanced Transmission Selection
The following table lists the traffic groupings ETS uses to select multiprotocol traffic for transmission.
Data Center Bridging (DCB) 303










